Anopheles pharoensis Theobald, 1901 [see Theobald, 1902].
Subfamily Anophelinae, genus Anopheles. Subgenus Cellia includes 220 formally recognised species and a growing number of unnamed members of sibling species complexes that are divided between six Series comprised of Groups and Subgroups (see Anopheles Classification, Subgenus Cellia) believed to represent phylogenetically related assemblages based principally on morphological similarity (Harbach, 2004).
Most species of subgenus Cellia have distributions in the Afrotropical, Australian and Oriental Regions, but some species occur in southern areas of the Palaearctic. Species of Cellia are conspicuously absent from the majority of the islands of the Pacific, including the large islands of New Zealand, Fiji and New Caledonia.
Phylogenetic analyses of morphological and molecular data (Krzywinski et al., 2001a, 2001b; Sallum et al., 2000, 2002; Harbach & Kitching, 2005) have shown that subgenus Cellia is a monophyletic group. Two unique, shared characters, cibarial armature of females with cones only and the genital lobe of pupae with a finger-like projection, support a sister-group relationship between Cellia (Old World) and Kerteszia + Nyssorhynchus (New World) (Harbach & Kitching, 2005). Dixit et al. (2010) recently inferred the phylogeny and divergence times of the Myzomyia, Neocellia and Pyretophorus Series based on COII sequences of the mitochondrial genome.
Subgenus Cellia includes species with four or more pale spots involving the costa and veins R-R1, and the other veins usually also have distinct pale markings. With few exceptions, the cibarial armature is well developed in females and the genitalia of males have a cluster of 4-6 (usually 5) parabasal setae (no internal seta) on the gonocoxites, usually not borne on raised tubercles. Larvae usually have a small, single seta 1-A inserted on the lateral (outer) side of the antenna. Seta 2-C are normally well separated, at least as far apart as the distance between 2-C and 3-C on either side. Each pleural setal groups (setae 9-12-P,M,T) is variable, but one or both long mesopleural and metapleural setae are often plumose. Pupae have a semi-tubular trumpet (angusticorn) with the longest axis vertical more or less in line with the stem, seta 9 on segments V-VII is usually relatively long and sharply pointed, paddle seta 1-Pa is commonly long and hooked or curved, and the genital lobe on male pupae has an apical pair of rounded points or knobs. See Genus Anopheles.
The immature stages of species of subgenus Cellia are adapted to a wide variety of ground-water habitats, ranging from small collections of water such as animal footprints and puddles that lack vegetation to large bodies of water such as rice fields, swamps and river margins that have shelter provided by vegetation. A number of species thrive in both fresh- and brackish-water habitats and some normally inhabit only brackish-water pools. Whereas the bionomics of species involved in malaria transmission is generally well known, comparatively little is known about the biology of most species. See tribe Anophelinae and genus Anopheles for general information concerning the bionomics of anopheline mosquitoes.
Subgenus Cellia is divided into six Series (Cellia, Neocellia, Myzomyia, Neomyzomyia, Paramyzomyia and Pyretophorus). Each series contains vectors of malarial protozoa and microfilariae. The principal vectors of malaria include members of sibling species complexes: the gambiae and funestus complexes in the Afrotropical Region; the balabacensis, culicifacies, dirus,. Fluviatilis, leucosphyrus, maculatus, minimus and sundaicus complexes in the Oriental Region; the farauti and punctulatus complexes in the Australasian Region. Anopheles sergentii (Myzomyia Series) and An. stephensi (Neocellia Series) are also major vectors in the Middle East and the Indian Subcontinent.
Lane, 1953 (Neotropical Region); Mattingly & Knight, 1956 (Arabia); Cova-García, 1961 (Venezuela); Belkin, 1962 (taxonomy, South Pacific); DuBose & Curtin, 1965 (keys, Mediterranean area); Grjebine, 1966 (Madagascar); Gillies & de Meillon, 1968 (Afrotropical Region); Reid, 1968 (Malaysia, Borneo); Cagampang-Ramos & Darsie, 1970 (keys, Philippine Islands); Gutsevich et al., 1974 (former USSR); Klein, 1977 (Cambodia); Tanaka et al., 1979 (Japan); Harrison, 1980 (Myzomyia Series, Thailand); Lu & Li, 1982 (China); Rao, 1984 (India); Lee et al., 1987 (Australasian Region); Gillies & Coetzee, 1987 (Afrotropical Region); Das et al., 1990 (keys, India); Darsie & Pradhan, 1990 (Nepal); Glick, 1992 (keys, southwestern Asia and Egypt); Rattanarithikul & Panthusiri, 1994 (keys, medically important species, Thailand); Nagpal & Sharma, 1995 (India); Lu Baolin et al., 1997 (China); Rattanarithikul et al., 2006 (keys, Thailand).
Culicidae Classification: Cellia